While reading chapter 6, I had to look to see when this book
was written because of some of the YA titles they include in the chapter. It is
a little bit older, 2006 or so, which helps me understand why they highlight Twilight and not The Hunger Games. It seems like during my generation YA lit has
really exploded. I kind of attribute it to the success of the Harry Potter
series. Writers seem to get the idea that if a book appeals to a teen audience,
then their parents will, in all likelihood, pick it up too. Many of them do,
too. YA isn’t just for teens.
In groups
last week, Dana, Katie, and I discussed that in order to get students at the
point where they can digest the classics that teachers like to have kids read,
they should read YA to build up to the point where they feel more comfortable
with classic works. I love the classics. But there is so much YA out there.
I really was able to connect with the reading strategies.
Almost all of them have been done in a classroom I was in as a high school or
even as a college student. I have thought about starting the week off with an
inspirational thought or story (not a devotional) and having the students free
write about the story from their own perspective, or work with that theme for
the week. I think that SSR is so important to young readers. Our brains are a
muscle that must be exercised like every other muscle, and if it isn’t it will
decay. Students need to understand this so maybe they put more into the
writing/reading exercises we give them.
I do have one question though. I know why I love to read. It
takes me to foreign places and helps me cope with life. How do I make my kids
understand how important reading is? I will have to try to be a good example
and to make my love be transparent. This idea is something I have been
struggling with for a long time. Hopefully I can find the answer to that
question in this class.
GREAT q! I wish I had a definitive answers, but if I did, I'd problem have a best seller! My best response to your question is to find out as much as you can about your students - who they are, what they like, how they learn, what they do outside of class, etc. - and go from there. Kids who know you care about who they are and what they do will always respond better to what you're asking them to do. I think, like you mentioned, you can also be a great leader and champion for reading - find books you think they'll like and share them with the class, have kids give book talks, bring in all kinds of text in addition to textbook - songs, recipes, magazines, comics, poems, etc. Teach kids that reading isn't only reading of one kind of text! I think that's a start (:
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